But this Final Four is about more than two games. Here's a look at everything that will make 2014's showing must-watch.

1. It's in Dallas: Everything is bigger in Texas, even the biggest postseason tournament in college sports. That's evident simply based on the tournament's venue, Jerry Jones' cavernous AT&T Stadium, which houses 105,000 - a number that could surely eclipse the previous attendance record of 2011 in Reliant Stadium. Binoculars will surely be needed for seats way up high.

3. Shattering misconceptions: Wisconsin players know the perception of their program: "White, slow, nonathletic." As George Schroeder writes, the Badgers might not feature a ton of NBA talent - although Frank Kaminsky's multidimensional skill set has been eye-opening, and Sam Dekker's continued development will be intriguing - but it might be best to chuck the preconception.

"Just keep saying it over and over and people believe it without watching," Kentucky coach John Calipari said.

"To achieve your dreams, you have to stick it through those tough times," Young said. "You fail when you decide to give up, when you want to stop fighting. When things are tough, when things are against you, you keep pushing. You keep pounding that rock - that's our phrase - because you never know when the rock is going to break. That is something I'll take with me the rest of my life."

5. Batman and Robin: While Napier has been the clear-cut star of UConn's Final Four run, backcourt sidekick Ryan Boatright has been overshadowed. The guard tandem's cohesiveness and balance have been a key ingredient to the Huskies' success and that camaraderie came off the court (they went fishing together!). And the unselfishness is obvious, as Nicole Auerbach shows in her piece on the duo.

"It don't bother me," Boatright said of the Batman-Robin analogy. "I've got good friends and family. They keep my head on right. Going through high school - actually, all through my life - I was always Batman. I always had someone else they were calling the sidekick. Your time will come. ... Shabazz is the man right now, he's Batman. But when he goes to the league, he's not going to be Batman. His time will come around. You've got to understand that. There can't be jealousy or selfishness."

6. Money, money, money: The Final Four brings the season's biggest games, and its biggest rewards for head coaches. Each of the head coaches can get significant bonus money, Steve Berkowitz notes. Columnist Nancy Armour believes has an idea where some of the dough could go, saying:

Here's a novel concept: How about we take that money, along with the bonuses all the other coaches in big-time sports get, and use it to close the roughly $3,000 gap between the value of a college athletic scholarship and what it really costs to go to school.

7. It'll give us a taste of next year: College basketball is a sport that lends itself to a lot of predicting. So we jumped into the DeLorean and forecast what we know you'll be wondering on Monday night after UConn, Wisconsin, Florida or Kentucky cuts down the nets: The 2015 Final Four.

8. Because this has been the best tournament ever: There's always madness in the NCAA tournament. But there's evidence to support that bold statement. This year's tourney is averaging 9.8 million viewers, the highest viewership in 21 years, according to Nielsen Media Research. And the games have been noticeably more competitive: The average margin of victory in Sweet 16 games, 6.5 points, was the lowest since the tournament expanded to 64 teams in 1985, according to Stats Inc.

Wichita State coach Gregg Marshall, the national coach of the year, summed it up best:

"I knew the tournament was going to be a wide-open affair this year, and that the team that played the best on a given night was going to win. The tournament's always great, but honestly, this year 15 to 20 teams could win it. And you've got four teams now that can win it."

Scott Gleeson, a national college basketball writer/digital producer for USA TODAY Sports, is on Twitter @ScottMGleeson.